Avanti Entrepreneur Avanti Entrepreneur Magazine Fall 2017 | Page 18

ARI WEINWEIG 4 PEOPLE DO THEIR BEST WORK WHEN THEY’RE PART OF A REALLY GREAT ORGANIZATION Ultimately, people want to feel that their work makes a positive difference, that their extra efforts are noticed, and that they can improve the quality of their lives and the lives of those around them through their work. When we accomplish this, we have more fun, service improves, sales go up, and all those other good things that we like to see, start to happen—and with amazing regularity! Here at Zingerman’s, we’ve always taken the approach that we are going to treat the people who chose to work with us as if they are volunteers. As with our customers, we need our staff way more than they need us. So how rewarding does the workplace have to be? Well, pretty darned rewarding. Please note that we mean “rewarding” in every sense of the word—financially, sure, but also emotionally, intellectually, and physically. 5 IF YOU WANT THE STAFF TO GIVE GREAT SERVICE TO CUSTOMERS, THE LEADERS HAVE TO GIVE GREAT SERVICE TO THE STAFF This rule is less obvious and probably less widely accepted than some of the others. But it’s every bit as important. It’s one of the key tenets of Servant Leadership, which is the core of our leadership philosophy here at Zingerman’s. (We learned it from Robert Greenleaf ’s excellent book, Servant Leadership.) Here’s the deal: the service that the staff gives to customers is never going to be better than the service that we, as leaders, provide to the staff. The tone comes from the top; although exceptional service providers may occasionally crop up on their own, they’ll always be the exception. The rest is up to us. IF YOU WANT GREAT PERFORMANCE FROM YOUR STAFF, YOU HAVE TO GIVE THEM CLEAR EXPECTATIONS AND TRAINING TOOLS To run a great organization, it’s very clear that we need to be clear about what we’re asking from the folks who work for us. And then we 6 18 need to effectively teach them how to meet our expectations. competitors can’t quite muster up the energy to make it happen. The validity of this natural law was confirmed in Marcus Buckingham and Curt Coffman’s book, First, Break All the Rules, in which the Gallup Organization surveyed a million workers and 80,000 managers to determine which factors were most important for keeping the best workers in their jobs for the longest period of time. Their single most important element? Clear expectations. Second most critical? The tools to do their work, among which effective training figures at the top of the list. TO GET TO GREATNESS, YOU’VE GOT TO KEEP GETTING BETTER, ALL THE TIME! The most successful organizations and individuals understand this. From medicine to the arts, from nonprofits to pro sports—the best in any field are all going after improvement all the time. You can call it continuous improvement, kaizen, or whatever you like. The reality is that if we’re not learning, growing, and improving, then the marketplace is going to pass us by. 7 “The service that the staff gives to customers is never going to be better than the service that we as leaders provide to the staff.” SUCCESSFUL BUSINESSES DO THE THINGS THAT OTHERS KNOW THEY SHOULD DO . . . BUT GENERALLY DON’T While business books often focus on some stroke of Steven Jobs – like genius, I think that more often than not, the real genius is mostly in doing the sort of drudgerous stuff that anyone who really thinks about it could do, but doesn’t. Most people don’t do this type of work because it seems too hard, too boring, too unrewarding . . . too something. For whatever reason, the best businesses do it anyway, while their (oft-complaining) 7 8 Early on in my leadership life, I used to think we’d get to some point where success would allow us to coast. Man, was I ever wrong on that one. Fortunately I realized the error of my ways in time. In truth, I think running the business well actually gets harder, not easier, the longer you go on. But once I made peace with that reality, then living this rule was infinitely less stressful for me. 9 SUCCESS MEANS YOU GET BETTER PROBLEMS Although most of us are raised with the belief that effective work eliminates problems, the reality is quite different. We’re always going to have problems. The key is to pick the problems you want and then appreciate the chance to work on them, all the while working to get better problems still. Don’t believe me? OK, would you rather have too few customers and struggle to make your payroll, or have sales so strong that you have to struggle to keep up? Obviously, I like seeing sales levels right “on plan” best of all, but the reality is that generally, I’d rather have sales be too high than too low. Similarly, I’d far prefer the problem of having too many good people in the organization and not quite enough opportunity for them all in the moment than to have too few good people. WHATEVER YOUR STRENGTHS ARE, THEY WILL LIKELY LEAD STRAIGHT INTO YOUR WEAKNESSES I used to think there was this big conflict at 10